Pavel Bure’s contentious history with the Vancouver Canucks will reportedly come to a peaceful conclusion this weekend when Bure is inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

According to multiple reports, the Canucks have decided to retire Bure's sweater.

Vancouver has long mulled the move, which wasn't a guarantee because of how Bure ended his time with the Canucks. After seven prolific seasons, the electric winger demanded a trade in 1998 and vowed he would never return to the city.

Team general manager Mike Gillis — Bure's agent when he signed with Vancouver before the 1991-92 season — first met with Bure two years ago to broach the subject, according to the Toronto Star.

The team has not officially confirmed the decision.

The Province, meanwhile, reports that Canucks owner Francesco Aquilini will fly to Toronto this weekend to meet Bure for dinner and detail his plans to honor the former captain.

"Francesco called him with some really good news," Bure’s longtime friend Gino Odjick told the newspaper. "He is extremely happy about it. It was touching, to have an owner that's involved and recognizes he's the first player with the Canucks to enter the Hall of Fame.

“For him to fly from Vancouver makes this a really great week, I tell you," Odjick said, while still not confirming the news. "Francesco has been talking about (retiring Bure's jersey) for quite a while. I don't see it not happening."

The team has previously invited Bure to join its Ring of Honor, a tribute that doesn't include retiring one's sweater.

Bure topped 50 goals three times with the Canucks, including back-to-back 60-goal seasons in 1992-93 and 1993-94.

His on-ice ability was never questioned, but Bure's perceived lack of involvement in the community — and his ugly ending with the franchise — have been demarcations.